The Jerusalem Post

Individual tourists left confused amid country’s reopening

- • By GABRIELLE ABRAMS and NELL SCHWARTZ

Individual­s from abroad will be allowed to enter Israel beginning July 1, but without clear government guidelines potential tourists are saying they are confused and hesitant.

Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked confirmed Israel will open its doors to vaccinated tourists, as well as children up to age six, at the beginning of next month. However, many details regarding travel remain up in the air.

Former Yesh Atid MK Dov Lipman, who has been instrument­al in the last few months helping American foreigners reunite with their family members in Israel, wrote on Facebook on Sunday there are “many details that still need to be worked out.”

These pending details include which vaccines will require serologica­l testing once the inoculated are in Israel, and a confirmed list of countries whose tourists will not be allowed in due to increasing Covid-19 cases. Currently, Israelis are allowed to travel to any country, except those with high morbidity rates such as Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa.

Israel has also yet to release any informatio­n regarding whether or not unvaccinat­ed tourists with documentat­ion of recovery from Covid-19 will be allowed in the country. Informatio­n on the exemption process for unvaccinat­ed people is also not yet available to the public.

Emma Shapiro, a recent graduate from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticu­t, describes herself as “stupidly optimistic” about her upcoming trip.

Shapiro is planning to travel with her sister to Israel on July 2 as a graduation present from her parents. However, the informatio­n online about visiting the Jewish state as an individual tourist, as well as the documentat­ion required prior to her trip, is “outdated and contradict­ory.”

Shapiro is hoping that if there is any reason she wouldn’t be able to fly, Israel would inform her in New York before her trip begins.

“I’m not going to fly to Israel if I don’t know for sure that I’ll be let into the country,” she said.

Like Shapiro, Gaby Danziger of Houston is planning on traveling to Israel for a family vacation shortly after the country reopens.

Danzinger said that she “does not feel the most secure in this trip because there is confusion over the July 1 opening date potentiall­y being pushed back.”

However, she remains hopeful that her July 3 trip will take place according to plan.

ADI AHARONI, CEO of the popular travel agency Israel Experts, hosted the first tourist group since the pandemic began.

Aharoni brought a group to Israel on May 27 as part of the Ministry of Tourism’s pilot program. The group was fully vaccinated and tested for COVID-19 within 72 hours of their flights. They also filled out all of the required paperwork and were tested again upon arrival at the airport along with a serologica­l test once they were settled in the country. By the next morning, the group was cleared to travel around the country.

Aharoni believes that tourism will certainly be made easier after July 1, but exactly how much easier he is not sure. Members of Aharoni’s tours have found themselves turning to him with their laundry list of questions about travel to Israel post-COVID, although he is unable to answer many of their questions confidentl­y due to a lack of informatio­n from authoritie­s.

As confusion persists, potential tourists remain vigilant in their efforts to return to Israel after a hiatus of at least a year and a half.

Jamie Hayeem, a potential summer tourist from London, said that he “checks the news daily to make sure nothing has changed in terms of when Israel plans to open.”

Hayeem typically spends his summers with friends at his family’s home in Caesarea, something that he is hoping to do again this July. His optimism is shared by many tourists looking to return to Israel this summer and enjoy a pre-pandemic style vacation.

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